Index – Foreign – A terrorist attack may have been the delay next to the former editorial office of Charlie Hebdo



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Four people were meeting late Friday afternoon in the French capital, not far from the former editorial office of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, Boulevard Richard Lenoiron, writes Le Monde.

The two victims of the attack are in serious condition, France 24 said.

A butcher’s beard-shaped knife was found at the scene. According to Le Figaro, two injured news agency journalists, a man and a woman, are employees of Premières Lignes. They were smoking in the street when they were attacked.

The authorities have launched an investigation into an “assassination attempt linked to a terrorist organization” being carried out by the anti-terrorist police.

Two people are suspected of the attack and both have been arrested.

Images of the two suspects from unofficial sources have already been uploaded to the World Wide Web. Authorities have not yet confirmed that the perpetrators in the images below were the perpetrators. All you know is that the interrogation of one of them is already underway.

The following images of one of the suspects were posted on the internet.

And the photo below was taken of one of the weapons used in the attack.

A photograph of the other perpetrator can be seen in the BBC report.

Police preparedness in the area is enormous, schools in districts 3, 4, and 11 have been closed, and students are unable to leave the classroom. According to Le Monde, a man was arrested near the Place de Bastille.

Charlie Hebdo Street, A Rue Nicolas-Appert, was hermetically sealed. This represents the former editorial office of the French satirical magazine that was the target of a deadly attack in 2015.

Prime Minister Jean Castex wrote on Twitter that he immediately met with Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin to discuss the situation.

Charlie Hebdo’s editorial team carried out a terrorist attack on January 7, 2015 against two Algerian-born terrorists, Said and Chérif Kouachi, over the Mohamed cartoons published in the newspaper. On January 9, both were shot by commandos. The murder of Charlie Hebdo was the beginning of the 2015 wave of Islamist terrorism, which killed 250 people in France. The trial of those who provided logistical or other assistance to the terrorists began three weeks ago in Paris. Eleven defendants must be held accountable for their actions, and Charlie Hebdo has scheduled a reissue of his previous cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad before the trial begins.

(Cover photo: Ambulance transport injured near Charlie Hebdo’s former editorial office on September 25, 2020. Photo: Alain Jocard / AFP)

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